Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0009952 (febrile convulsions)
1,215 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Children who present delirium associated with high fever may develop with encephalitis or encephalopathy, especially in influenza infection. The aim of this study is to differentiate the patients with the central nervous infection or with the parasomnias from benign transient delirium in patients who visit the emergency room complaining of illusions. Ten patients aged from 2 to 7 years were enrolled in this study. There were 2 patients with central nervous infection, one with encephalo-myelitis due to mycoplasma infection and one with acute necrotizing encephalopathy due to influenza infection. The remaining 8 patients had benign delirium associated with high fever which disappeared in a self-limiting manner. Three patients had a febrile seizure (FS) and 4 patients had family history of FS. The points to differentiate the delirium with parasomnias from benign type is fearful expression, positive past history, autonomic nerve symptoms. Delirium consisted of visual hallucination, and occurred in association with sleep except in the patients with encephalopathy who became delirious when they were awake. Abnormal neurological findings such as meningeal signs and disturbed consciousness, appearance of delirium in the waking state, and marked slowing in the EEG background activity were considered to be warning factors useful in differentiating the benign type from the delirium with central nervous infection.
...
PMID:[Differential diagnosis in children having delirium associated with high fever]. 1287 7

We studied the relation among serum cytokine levels, EEG changes, and mild neurological complications (delirium and febrile seizure) in children with influenza. The serum levels of interleukin-6 (IL-6), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), and soluble tumor necrosis factor receptor-1 (sTNFR-1) were measured in 27 children with proven influenza infection with mild neurological complications (10 patients with delirium and 17 with febrile seizures) and seven control children. EEG was recorded in 14 children with neurological complications. EEG showed focal slowing in four of nine patients with delirium and in four of five with febrile seizures. Generalized slowing was observed in one patient with delirium. The median serum IL-6 level was 31.2+/-15.1 pg/ml (range, 7.5-64.5 pg/ml) in the delirium group, 42.3+/-44.0 pg/ml (range, 8.0-196.0 pg/ml) in the febrile seizure group, and 15.4+/-7.0 pg/ml (range, 7.2-28.0 pg/ml) in the control group. Serum TNF-alpha and sTNFR-1 levels were not different among three groups. Mild neurological complications associated with influenza were related to the mildly abnormal serum IL-6 levels and EEG findings. The combination of these parameters will be useful for early diagnosis and differentiation of neurological complications in children with influenza. Further studies will be necessary for investigating that IL-6 has the diagnostic value for differentiation between severe encephalopathy and mild neurological complications in children with influenza.
...
PMID:Serum levels of cytokines and EEG findings in children with influenza associated with mild neurological complications. 1728 1

Two newly proposed infectious encephalitis/encephalopathy syndromes, in which magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is essential for the diagnosis, have been reviewed. Acute encephalopathy with biphasic seizures and late reduced diffusion (AESD) is reported only in East Asian infants, characterized by a febrile seizure (usually >30 min) as the initial neurological symptom on day 1, followed by secondary seizures at day 4 to 6; affected children display variable levels of neurological sequelae. MRI shows no acute abnormality during the first two days; reduced diffusion appears in the frontal or fronto-parietal subcortical white matter during days 3 to 9, then disappears between days 9 and 25. Excitotoxic injury with delayed neuronal death is hypothesized as a possible mechanism based on MR spectroscopic findings. Clinically mild encephalitis/encephalopathy with a reversible splenial lesion (MERS) is characterized by a reversible lesion with homogeneously reduced diffusion in the corpus callosum (at least involving the splenium), sometimes associated with symmetrical white matter lesions. The most common neurological symptom is delirious behavior, followed by consciousness disturbance, and seizures, all of which completely recover within a month. The reason for the transiently reduced diffusion within the lesions is unknown; possibilities that have been postulated include intramyelinic edema, interstitial edema in tightly packed fibers, and a transient inflammatory infiltrate.
...
PMID:Two newly proposed infectious encephalitis/encephalopathy syndromes. 1933 28

Acute encephalitis/encephalopathy is a life-threatening disease, and early diagnosis is important. The acute encephalitis/encephalopathy is characterized by impaired consciousness, delirium, convulsion, pyrexia, vomiting, headache, paralysis and so on. We need to distinguish various diseases with similar symptoms, such as febrile seizure, bacterial meningitis, acute disseminated encephalomyelitis, cerebrovascular disease, non-convulsive status epilepticus, benign convulsion with gastroenteritis, hypoglycemia, inherited metabolic disease, toxicosis, heat attack, somatoform disorder and so on, from acute encephalitis/encephalopathy. We describe the features of these diseases in point of view with difference from acute encephalitis/encephalopathy. A synthetic and prompt evaluation including medical interview, neurological sign, blood examination, computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, spinal fluid examination, electroencephalogram, is necessary to diagnose as acute encephalitis/encephalopathy.
...
PMID:[Differential diagnosis for diseases similar to acute encephalitis/encephalopathy]. 2140 Aug 45

The novel pandemic (pdm) influenza A (H1N1) 2009 virus caused an epidemic of critical illness, with some patients developing severe acute respiratory distress syndrome. Pdm H1N1 2009 infection has been reported to cause fatal encephalopathy and myocarditis as well as pneumonia. To investigate the actual characteristics of the encephalopathy associated with pdm H1N1 2009 infection in Japan, questionnaires were distributed and information collected on 207 cases of encephalopathy during one season. The results of the survey showed that encephalopathy was reported predominantly in males. The outcome was recorded in 188 of the 207 cases; 16 of 188 patients (8.5%) died, while 23 (12.2%) had sequelae. Serious cases were distributed across all age groups. Febrile convulsion was noted at a higher rate in medical past-history in cases without sequelae (40 of the 149 cases; 27%) than in serious cases. In contrast, pre-existing epilepsy and mental retardation were observed more frequently in serious cases. Twelve cases exhibited biphasic seizures; one-half of these had sequelae, but none was fatal. Ten cases were accompanied by high cytokine levels, and three of these children died. Among the 149 cases with good outcomes, 29 of 116 cases (25%) showed abnormalities on MRI, and 14 of these demonstrated reversible splenial lesions. Abnormal behaviors, especially delirium and visual hallucinations, were observed more frequently in cases without sequelae. In conclusion, pdm H1N1 2009 infection-associated encephalopathy was a critical disease in children, with rapidly progressive characteristics similar to those of seasonal influenza-associated encephalopathy.
...
PMID:National survey of pandemic influenza A (H1N1) 2009-associated encephalopathy in Japanese children. 2271 42

Fifty-eight patients who visited the emergency room of our center with febrile convulsions and impaired consciousness, and underwent paperless electroencephalography soon after arrival. They consisted of 25 male and 33 female children, ranging in age from 5 months to 15 years and 4 months, with a mean age of 4 years and 10 months. The final diagnoses were poor responsiveness associated with fever and febrile delirium in 5 patients, febrile convulsions in 26, encephalitis/encephalopathy in 24, convulsions associated with mild gastroenteritis in 2, and aseptic meningitis in 1. The appearance of spindle wave within 24 hours after admission was considered to be a favorable prognostic factor, whereas generalized high-amplitude delta waves without fast-wave components and dysrhythmic flat basic waves were considered poor prognostic factors. We conclude that bed-side paperless electroencephalography is useful for the evaluation of changes in the brain function and course of treatment.
...
PMID:[Clinical study of patients undergoing paperless electroencephalography in emergency room]. 2284 62